PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Large study suggests people with low levels of vitamin K have less healthy lungs

Large study suggests people with low levels of vitamin K have less healthy lungs
2023-08-10
(Press-News.org) People with low levels of vitamin K in their blood are more likely to have poor lung function and to say they suffer with asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and wheezing, according to a study published today (Thursday) in ERJ Open Research [1].

 

Vitamin K is found in leafy green vegetables, vegetable oils and cereal grains. It plays a role in blood clotting, and so helps the body to heal wounds, but researchers know very little about its role in lung health.

 

Researchers say their new findings do not alter the current advice on vitamin K intake, but they do support further research to see if some people could benefit from taking vitamin K supplements.

 

The study was by team of Danish researchers at Copenhagen University Hospital and the University of Copenhagen. It involved a group of 4,092 people aged between 24 and 77 years living in Copenhagen.

 

Study participants took part in lung function testing, called spirometry, gave blood samples and answered questionnaires on their health and lifestyle. The blood tests included a marker of low levels of vitamin K in the body called dp-ucMGP. Spirometry measures the amount of air a person can breathe out in one second (forced expiratory volume or FEV1) and the total volume of air they can breathe in one forced breath (forced vital capacity or FVC).

 

The researchers found that people with markers of low levels of vitamin K had lower FEV1 and lower FVC on average. People with lower levels of vitamin K were also more likely to say they had COPD, asthma or wheezing.

 

Researcher, Dr Torkil Jespersen said: “We already know that vitamin K has an important role in the blood and research is beginning to show that it’s also important in heart and bone health, but there’s been very little research looking at vitamin K and the lungs. To our knowledge, this is the first study on vitamin K and lung function in a large general population. Our results suggest that vitamin K could play a part in keeping our lungs healthy.

 

“On their own, our findings do not alter current recommendations for vitamin K intake, but they do suggest that we need more research on whether some people, such as those with lung disease, could benefit from vitamin K supplementation.”

 

The research team are already working on a large clinical trial comparing vitamin K supplementation with a placebo (dummy pill) to look at any effects on heart and bone health in the general population (the InterVitaminK trial). Based on their new results, they will now include analyses of lung function in this trial.

 

Dr Apostolos Bossios from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden is Secretary of the European Respiratory Society’s assembly on Airway diseases, asthma, COPD, and chronic cough, and was not involved in the research. He said: “This study suggests that people with low levels of vitamin K in their blood may have poorer lung function. Further research will help us understand more about this link and see whether increasing vitamin K can improve lung function or not.

 

“In the meantime, we can all try to eat a healthy, balanced diet to support our overall health, and we can protect our lungs by not smoking, taking part in exercise and doing all we can to cut air pollution.”

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Large study suggests people with low levels of vitamin K have less healthy lungs Large study suggests people with low levels of vitamin K have less healthy lungs 2 Large study suggests people with low levels of vitamin K have less healthy lungs 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Sanford Burnham Prebys Cancer Center earns merit extension from NCI

Sanford Burnham Prebys Cancer Center earns merit extension from NCI
2023-08-10
Sanford Burnham Prebys’ Cancer Center has received a rare and prestigious Merit Extension Award from the National Cancer Institute (NCI), recognizing and rewarding its earlier accomplishments as well as current research plans. The award extends the center’s current 5-year Cancer Center Support Grant (CCSG) for an additional two years. There are only seven Basic Laboratory Cancer Centers in the NCI’s national network. These centers focus primarily on laboratory research: developing, conducting, translating and advancing fundamental discoveries to clinical testing and, ultimately, ...

Stem cell therapy rescues symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease

Stem cell therapy rescues symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease
2023-08-09
In the ongoing search for a cure for Alzheimer’s disease, a burgeoning branch of medicine is bringing new hope. Stem cell therapies are already being used to treat various cancers and disorders of the blood and immune system. In a new proof-of-concept study, scientists at University of California San Diego show stem cell transplants may also be a promising therapeutic against Alzheimer’s.  In the study, publishing this month in Cell Reports, the researchers demonstrate that transplanting hematopoietic ...

Penn Medicine neuroscientists identify brain mechanism that drives focus despite distractions

2023-08-09
PHILADELPHIA—Trying to finish your homework while the big game is on TV? “Visual-movement” neurons in the front of your brain can help you stay focused, according to a new study from neuroscientists in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. In the study, published recently in Neuron, the scientists sought to illuminate the neural mechanism that helps the brain decide whether to focus visual attention on a rewarding task or an alluring distraction. By analyzing neuron activity in animal models as they faced this kind of attentional ...

Novel machine-learning method produces detailed population trend maps for 550 bird species

Novel machine-learning method produces detailed population trend maps for 550 bird species
2023-08-09
Scientists at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology have developed a novel way to model whether the populations of more than 500 bird species are increasing or decreasing. The method solves a nagging statistical problem by accounting for year-to-year changes in the behavior of people collecting the data. The result is detailed trend maps for each species down to an eight-mile radius--a major boost for local conservation efforts. Scientists used an approach called Double Machine Learning. Details are published in the journal Methods in Ecology and Evolution. “Changing human behavior presents a problem for statistical analysis ...

CDK9 Inhibitors: A promising combination partner in treating hematological malignancies

CDK9 Inhibitors: A promising combination partner in treating hematological malignancies
2023-08-09
“[...] CDK9 inhibitors could play a role in future treatments of hematological diseases and could be a great ally when combined with other therapeutic approaches.”  BUFFALO, NY- August 9, 2023 – A new research perspective was published in Oncotarget's Volume 14 on August 7, 2023, entitled, “CDK9 INHIBITORS: a promising combination partner in the treatment of hematological malignancies.” In their new perspective, researchers Daniel Morillo, Gala Vega and Victor Moreno from Hospital Fundación Jiménez Díaz discuss Cyclin-dependent ...

A novel theory of aging — independent of damage accumulation

A novel theory of aging — independent of damage accumulation
2023-08-09
“We argue that in multicellular organisms, neighbouring cells are in constant competition.” BUFFALO, NY- August 9, 2023 – A new editorial paper was published in Aging (listed by MEDLINE/PubMed as "Aging (Albany NY)" and "Aging-US" by Web of Science) Volume 15, Issue 14, entitled, “A novel theory of ageing independent of damage accumulation.” The underlying cause or causes of aging are an enduring mystery, but in 1977 Kirkwood postulated that organisms might gain a fitness advantage by reducing investment in somatic maintenance if this allowed them to invest more resources in more crucial ...

Long-term use of certain acid reflux drugs linked to higher risk of dementia

2023-08-09
MINNEAPOLIS – People who take acid reflux medications called proton pump inhibitors for four-and-a-half years or more may have a higher risk of dementia compared to people who do not take these medications, according to new research published in the August 9, 2023, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. This study does not prove that acid reflux drugs cause dementia; it only shows an association. Acid reflux is when stomach acid flows into the esophagus, usually after a meal or when lying down. People with acid reflux may experience heartburn and ulcers. People ...

Research sheds new light on gene therapy for blood disorders

2023-08-09
Research from experts at Michigan Medicine, the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and Penn Medicine is breaking ground on new ways of treating blood disorders, such as sickle cell anemia, through gene therapy.  To cure blood disorders, patients must undergo high dose chemotherapy and bone marrow transplantation. This requires a match between the recipient and donor immune system, but ~30% of patients do not have a match. Even when they do the donor immune system can attack the patient, graft versus host disease. Gene therapy corrects the mutation in a patient’s own cells ...

Few in US recognize inequities of climate change

2023-08-09
ITHACA, N.Y. – Despite broad scientific consensus that climate change has more serious consequences for some groups – particularly those already socially or economically disadvantaged – a large swath of people in the U.S. doesn’t see it that way. A new national survey study found that just over one-third of U.S. adults believe climate change is impacting some groups more than others. Nearly half feel that climate change impacts all groups about equally. And when the question referenced race in climate impacts, even fewer people believed some groups are more adversely affected than others. “Our earlier research showed that ...

New research points to possible seasonal climate patterns on early Mars

New research points to possible seasonal climate patterns on early Mars
2023-08-09
New observations of mud cracks made by the Curiosity Rover show that high-frequency, wet-dry cycling occurred in early Martian surface environments, indicating that the red planet may have once seen seasonal weather patterns or even flash floods. The research was published today in Nature. “These exciting observations of mature mud cracks are allowing us to fill in some of the missing history of water on Mars. How did Mars go from a warm, wet planet to the cold, dry place we know today? These mud cracks show us that transitional time, when liquid water was less abundant but still active on the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UCLA researchers develop new risk scoring system to account for role of chronic illness in post-surgery mortality

Mount Sinai BioDesign expands industry collaborations to expedite and enhance the development of innovative surgical technologies

Study reveals limits of using land surface temperature to explain heat hazards in Miami-Dade County

The Lancet Public Health: Accelerating actions to eliminate tobacco smoking could help increase life expectancy and prevent millions of premature deaths by 2050, modelling study suggests

The Lancet Public Health: Banning tobacco sales among young people could prevent 1.2 million lung cancer deaths, global modelling study suggests

One million people who never regularly smoked now vape in England

Methane emissions from dairy farms higher than thought - but conversion could reduce emissions

Early foster care gave poor women power, 17th-century records reveal

Unpacking polar sea ice

U of M Medical School receives $3.2M to study drivers of chronic low back pain

UT Health San Antonio School of Nursing’s Caring for the Caregiver program earns national award

People infer the past better than the future, study finds

Sexual and gender minorities more likely to experience life dissatisfaction, isolation, stress

In surgery for localized muscle-invasive bladder cancer, extended lymph node removal offers no survival benefit but does increase morbidity

“Nature-First Cities”, a new book explores how to invite nature back home, without evicting people

Health care site- and patient-related factors influencing COVID-19 vaccination completion rates

SwRI-built solar wind plasma sensor to help track space weather

Filament structure activates and regulates CRISPR-Cas ‘protein scissors’

Environmental quality of life benefits women worldwide

Satisfying friendships could be key for young, single adults’ happiness

Wild banana relatives of mainland Southeast Asia reveal hidden diversity and the urgent need to preserve nature’s genetic resources for future crops

A century of data uncovers how chestnut blight has devastated the American chestnut - and how forest composition has evolved since - in Shenanoah National Park, Virginia

Migration in adolescence may double the risk of psychosis in later life

Iron nuggets in the Pinnacles unlock secrets of ancient and future climates

Severe climate change may increase violence against women

Higher-order interactions can remodel the landscape of complex systems

New cardiovascular disease risk marker discovered in older women

Storms, floods, landslides associated with intimate partner violence against women two years later

How do ‘double skeptics’ affect government policy on climate and vaccination?

Electric vehicle owners on average are richer, drive more than the general population, and have a higher than average carbon footprint due to higher disposable income—but owning an EV reduces their tr

[Press-News.org] Large study suggests people with low levels of vitamin K have less healthy lungs